<b>Gold</b> Set for Steepest Fall in 32 Years: Weekly <b>Gold</b> ETF Update |
<b>Gold</b> Set for Steepest Fall in 32 Years: Weekly <b>Gold</b> ETF Update Posted: 28 Dec 2013 07:57 PM PST Although a weakened dollar helped give gold prices a slight boost during the past week, the spot price for gold is expected to register a nearly 30-percent drop during 2013, for the most significant decline since 1981. Worse yet, a number of analysts – such as Jeffrey Currie at Goldman Sachs – see gold prices falling lower. Currie expects gold to sink as far as $1,050 per ounce at this point next year. Gold prices had been suffering from publicity surrounding the anticipated taper of the Federal Reserve's bond-buying program. The quantitative easing program is credited with pushing gold prices to record highs during 2011. The weakening of the dollar resulting from quantitative easing had enhanced gold's status as a "safe haven". As a result, the phase-out of QE has been seen as a threat to gold prices. Although many commentators believed that the impact of the taper on the gold market had already been priced-in, trading activity since the December 18 FOMC meeting has proved them wrong. By December 18, the latest bearish, head-and-shoulders pattern was fully-formed on the chart for gold's spot price, setting the stage for the 2.52 percent swoon on December 19. Despite gold's advances since that point, it has not yet reached the December 18 closing price of $1,217.80. The spot price of gold will need to reach $1,235 per ounce before it can break the neckline of the December head-and-shoulders pattern. More important, it must reach $1,322 per ounce before it reaches the neckline of the October 17 – November 11 head-and-shoulders pattern in order to break its curse. The chart below depicts the trading activity in the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA:GLD) during the past 180 days (Chart courtesy of Stockcharts.com). As with the spot price of gold, yet another bearish, head-and-shoulders pattern has been formed on the chart for GLD during December. (This pattern is more readily-apparent on a chart drawn with a solid line rather than candlesticks.) Although GLD managed to advance 1.01 percent to $117.12 during Christmas week, GLD finished Friday's session 4.37 percent below its 50-day moving average of $122.48. GLD's Relative Strength Index climbed to 42.64 from last week's 37.22. The MACD has just crossed above the signal line, suggesting that GLD could continue its advance during the immediate future. .Disclaimer: The content included herein is for educational and informational purposes only, and readers agree to Wall Street Sector Selector's Disclaimer, Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy before accessing or using this or any other publication by Wall Street Sector Selector or Ridgeline Media Group, LLC. |
<b>Gold</b> Crash - Business Insider Posted: 30 Dec 2013 05:19 AM PST FRED The above chart shows the year-over-year change in the price of an ounce in gold. As you can see, this was the first year in over a decade that gold was down for the year. Not only did it fall, but it fell big. Everyone in the world should be happy about this development. There's a few reasons for this: -- The most obvious reason to be happy is one simply of direct observation: Gold crashed because the economy is returning to normal. People no longer feel as though everything is going to collapse. The US is doing okay, the European crisis is over, and there aren't major fears of a hard landing in China. For now there's no strong reason to think the global financial system could collapse. -- A secondary effect of lower gold prices is that there's less urgency to spend labor and energy digging up gold from the ground. Watching people spend lots of resources to dig up useless rocks is a sad thing for the world, so lower prices has a nice knock-on benefits. -- But the real reason we should be happy with the gold crash is that it proves the worth of the corpus of economic knowledge we've built up over all these years. If large government deficits and QE had resulted in hyperinflation and gold going to $10,000 then we'd pretty much have to do the drawing board in terms of what we know about the economy, and how we can prevent future crisis. The fact that the gold fever popped is a demonstrate that contra the angry-Austrian, hard-money cranks, the conventional view of the economy is more-or-less correct. And that knowledge is worth trillions (as evidenced by the fact that that knowledge quickly got the US out of the worst slowdown since the Great Depression). Gold's crashing represents an exit from the crisis mentality, and it vindicates the value of thousands of human-years worth of economic understanding, which may be incalculable. This is something everyone can be happy about. |
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